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March 23 1734 1734 James Oglethorpe sailed from Savannah aboard the man-of-war Aldborough for Charleston, where he would catch another ship for London. His return to England was prompted by the desire of other Trustees to have him report more completely on the state of affairs in the colony. In particular, they were concerned with Oglethorpe's lack of communication and what was perceived as excessive expenditures. In a bit of showmanship, Oglethorpe decided to bring a contingent of Yamacraw Indians with him. So aboard the Aldborough with Oglethorpe were chief Tomochichi, Senauki (Tomochichi's wife), Toonahowi (Tomochichi's great nephew and successor), five Yamacraw warriors, and John Musgrove (who would interpret). The voyage to Charleston took a week, after which they waited until May 7 to catch a ship to London. 1738 At the urging of William Stephens, a committee of the Trustees recommended adopting a modified form of female inheritance in Georgia. However, at the April 12 meeting of the Trustees, James Oglethorpe led the opposition to changing the tail male policy. 1861 Meeting in Savannah, Georgia's Secession Convention adopted a proposed new state constitution for Georgia -- the Constitution of 1861. The convention voted to submit the constitution to the public for ratification on the first Tuesday in July (which marked the first time Georgia voters were allowed to vote on the state constitution). Following this action, the convention adjourned. 1868 Fiddlin' John Carson was born in Fannin County, Ga. Carson was the first person to broadcast country music -- when he performed live on WSB radio in 1922. The next year, he became the first person to record country music . 1916 Governor Nathaniel Harris stayed in touch with Augusta's mayor constantly by phone, saying the state was prepared to help in any way possible after the devastating fire the previous day. 1938 - President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered a speech [see text] in Gainesville, GA. The speech was ostensibly to celebrate the rededication of Gainesville's Courthouse Square, which had been destroyed by tornadoes two years earlier. But Roosevelt used the occasion to launch a veiled attack on Georgia Senator Walter George, making this one of the few controversial speeches he made in the state of Georgia. This marked the beginning of Roosevelt's thirty-second visit to his "second home." 1938 Atlanta politician Maynard Jackson was born in Dallas, Texas. Jackson was the nephew of famed opera singer Mattiwilda Dobbs, who sang at his inauguration as mayor in 1974. He attended Morehouse College in Atlanta, where he was admitted at age fourteen as a Ford Foundation Early Admissions Scholar. He studied history and political science at Morehouse, graduating in 1956. He earned a law degree from North Carolina Central University in 1964 and held several legal positions before he actively entered politics. After serving as vice-mayor of Atlanta, he was elected to consecutive terms as mayor, running from 1974-1982. He was elected to another term in 1989. In 1990 he established the Maynard Jackson Youth Foundation to aid disadvantaged children of Atlanta. In 1994, Jackson retired from elective politics and began practicing law in Atlanta. He suffered a heart attack visiting Washington D.C. and died June 23, 2003. 1956 Testing the U.S. Supreme Court's earlier decisions on integrating public schools, two African-Americans applied for admission to the Georgia State College of Business Administration. Their applications, however, were denied. 1972 In a split decision in the case of Gooding v. Wilson, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a Georgia statute making unprovoked use of "opprobrious words or abusive language, tending to cause a breach of the peace" a misdemeanor crime was unconstitutionally vague in violation of the 1st and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. 1990 The U.S. Postal Service issued a 25-cent stamp commemorating the movie "Gone With the Wind." [Click here to see stamp and story.] 1998 Athens, Georgia's Kim
Bassinger won the 1997 Academy Award for best-supporting actress for her role
in "L.A. Confidential." In Their Own Words on This Day. . . 1734 Lutheran minister John Martin Boltzius was duly impressed with the apparent religious motivation of James Oglethorpe, who had delayed his planned trip to England to personally assist in the settlement of the Salzburger emigrants:
Source: George Fenwick Jones (ed.), Detailed Reports on the Salzburger Emigrants Who Settled in America . . . Edited by Samuel Urlsperger: Volume I, 1733-1734 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1968), p. 66. 1737 In London, the Earl of Egmont wrote in his journal of Trustee proceedings about Spanish threats to the security of Georgia and South Carolina. At the time of his entry, James Oglethorpe was in England:
Source: Robert G. McPherson (ed.), The Journal of The Earl of Egmont: Abstract of the Trustees Proceedings for Establishing the Colony of Georgia, 1732-1738 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1962), p. 248. 1779 Savannah merchant and Revolutionary soldier Joseph Clay had fled to South Carolina to escape the British occupying Savannah. From there he wrote to friends of the dire military situation in Georgia and the need for more support there:
Source: Collections of the Georgia Historical Society, Vol. VIII, Letters of Joseph Clay, Merchant of Savannah, 1776-1793 (Savannah: Georgia Historical Society, 1913), pp. 129-130. 1852 The death of a mother or infant during childbirth was a common occurrence. On this day, such a tragedy struck Gertrude Clanton in Richmond County, when a new-born brother died during delivery. It was a painful experience that she herself would later face -- four of the ten children she bore did not survive infancy:
Source: Virginia Ingraham Burr (ed.), The Secret Eye: The Journal of Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas, 1848-1889 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990), p. 102. 1864 After the loss of Chattanooga, Confederate forces spent the winter at Dalton, Ga. There was no question that with spring, Sherman would mount a new campaign on Georgia. But for right now, Confederate spirits were high, as A. J. Neal wrote his sister: ". . .The snow covers the ground four or five inches, and it is cold enough to make a mud chimney pleasant. We had plenty of fun yesterday and from the noise around I suppose all the army did. Before breakfast we had a company [snow ball] fight, one row against the other. . . . Everything was taken in good fun, but it was rough play. The ground was speckled with blood from bruised noses. . . . "About half of the men are in the wood after rabbits this evening. We are kept busy with drills, inspections, reviews, &c. [with] hardly any time to spare. We are to have target practice tomorrow and on Friday a sham battle with blank cartridges. . . . These sham battles are exciting, but I like them better than the other kind! ". . . I never say this army in such fine spirits, everything is hopeful and confident since we repulsed them [the Yankees] above Dalton. . . . Trains of pontoon wagons are ready at this place, and we can move rapidly. "I anticipate brilliant successes this spring and after a few hard fights a glorious peace. . . ." Source: Mills Lane (ed.), "Dear Mother: Don't grieve
about me. If I get killed, I'll only be dead.": Letters from Georgia Soldiers
in the Civil War (Savannah: Beehive Press, 1990), p. 285. January
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© Carl Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia
If you have a date related to Georgia history or people that ought to be included, or if know of entries that should be corrected, send a note to Ed Jackson or Charly Pou. Go to Yahoo/The History Channel This Day in History page for Mar. 23 Go to GeorgiaInfo table of contents
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